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Taxes On Meat May Join Carbon, Sugar To Help Limit Emissions

By Publications Checkout
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Taxes On Meat May Join Carbon, Sugar To Help Limit Emissions

Move over, taxes on carbon and sugar: the global levy that may be next is meat.

Some investors are betting governments around the world will find a way to start taxing meat production as they aim to improve public health and hit emissions targets set in the Paris Climate Agreement.

Socially focused investors are starting to push companies to diversify into plant protein, or even suggest livestock producers use a “shadow price” of meat - similar to an internal carbon price - to estimate future costs.

Meat could encounter the same fate as tobacco, carbon and sugar, which are currently taxed in 180, 60, and 25 jurisdictions around the world, respectively, according to a report Monday from investor group the FAIRR (Farm Animal Investment Risk & Return) Initiative.

Lawmakers in Denmark, Germany, China and Sweden have discussed creating livestock-related taxes in the past two years.

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Greenhouse Emissions

Greenhouse gas emissions from livestock are about 14.5% of the world’s total, according to the Food & Agriculture Organisation, which projects global meat consumption to increase 73% by mid-century, amid growing demand from economies like India and China.

That could result in as much as $1.6 trillion in health and environmental costs for the global economy by 2050, according to FAIRR, a London-based initiative created by Coller Capital.

“Investors are starting to consider this in a similar way to how they have considered climate risk,” said Rosie Wardle, who manages investor engagements at FAIRR.

“It’s kind of accepted now that we need to address livestock production and consumption to meet that 2 degree global warming limit.”

News by Bloomberg, edited by ESM. Click subscribe to sign up to ESM: The European Supermarket Magazine.

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